Condenser for ice-making and refrigerating machines.



I T. SHIPLEY. CONDENSER FOR ICE MAKING AND REFRIGERATING MACHINES.

APPLICATION FILED MAY 31. 1917- 1,234,639. Patented July 24,1917.

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APPLICATION FILED MAY3| I917- I 1 34,639, Patented July 24, 1917.

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CCNDENSER FOR IICE MAKING AND REFRIGERATING MACHINES.

APPLICATION FILED MAY31. |9|7 C] an we a,

T. SHIPLEY.

CONDENSER FOR ICE MAKING AND BEFRIGER ATING MACHINES.

APPLICATION FILED MAY 3h I917- I 1,234, 39, Patented July 24,1917.

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I THOMAS SHIPLEY, OF YORK, PENNSYLVANIA.

CONDENSER non ICE-MAKING AND REFRIGEBATING MACHINES.

Specification of Letters Patent.

Patented July 24, 1917.

Application filed May 31, 1917. Serial No. 171,925.

To all whom it may concern: 7

Be it known that I, THOMAS SHIPLEY, a citizen of the United States, and a resident of the city of York, in the county of York and State of Pennsylvania, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Condensers for Ice-Making and Refrigerating Machines, of which the following is a specification.

This application, so far as concernsthe subject matter of'claim 1 of the same, is a continuation of my application for improvements in ice making and refrigerating machines Serial No. 140,988, filed January 6, 1917. i

My invention relates to condensers for ice 7 making plants, and more particularly to that type of condensers, known as flooded condensers, in which the gas-usually ammonla gasto be condensed is injected directly into a body of liquid constantly renewed and maintained at a level above the gas injectportion of the condenser into which the gas under pressure is in ected and is thereby condensed.

Under my invention, the condenser body, the mixing chamber and connections between the liquid containing portion of the condenser and the mixing chamber for maintaining in the latter a body of liquid at a predetermined level are combined with a gas injecting nozzle in said mixing chamber having its discharge orifice below the level of the liquid and a conduit through which gas under pressure is supplied to said'nozzle, formed as a reversed U trap the top of the return bend of which stands above the level of the liquid, thus preventing the escape of the liquid contents of the mixing chamber through the nozzle and the gas supply conduit connected to the same, which might otherwise occur when the condenser is 'out'of operation. It is this feature which mainly characterizes my invention.

To enable those skilled in the art to understand and use my invention I shall proceed to describe the manner in which the same is or may be carried into effect by reference to the accompanying drawings, in which Figure 1 is a sectional side elevation of so much of a coil condenser of the flooded 'type embodying my improvement in its preferred form as needed for the purposes of explanation, the coil beingbroken away between 1ts ends to economize space.

' Fig. 2 is a vertical section partly in elev'a-;

tion on line 2-2, Fig. 1, designed to show more particularly the means for draining the liquid containing portion of the mixing chamber. Figs. 3, a, and 5 are vertical sections partly in elevation of modified forms of mixing chambers and the devices immediately associated therewith. 7

Referring to Fig. 1, A is a condensing coil of the flooded type, having its bottom stretch A connected to its top stretch through the. intermediary of the mixing chamber E connected on the one hand to the bottom stretch A, and on the other hand to a risery, which leads from the top of the mixing chamber to the top stretch of the coil. B is a'pre-cooler, such as usually associated with coil condensers, composed of two'stretches, the top one connected by pipe m to the gas header M, and the bottom one connected'to the mixing chamber. N is the liquid header into which leads the main liquid outlet pipe n from the condensing coil.

The mixing chamber E which contains the body of condensed ammonia liquid is provided with r a lateral inlet 6 connected as shown to a portion of the condenser coil A which is below the level ofthe main liquid outlet n, and which therefore is kept filled with liquid during the operation of the condenser. Through this inlet e, which in this instance is connected to the bottom stretch A of the condenser coil, liquid from the coil freely enters and fills the mixing chamber, or-that portion of the same in which the liquid is contained, toa height coinci-- dent with the level of the liquid outlet n, and maintains the body of liquid in said chamber at that level indicated by the broken line L, L, Fig. 4:, which'level is the samein all the different forms of myinvention illustratecl in the drawings. r v 1 The mixing chamber E is dividedby' a diaphragm O into two compartments, which communicate with one another through a nozzle-in the floor of said diaphragm, the 2' one E directly communicating with the inlet 6, and constantly filled with liquid up to the level L, L, whether the condenser be in action or not, the other- E containing the stand pipe F, which is set in an opening in the floor of E and is connected to, and receives 7 gas from, the bottom stretch of the pre-coolerB, said compartment E being filled with liquid onlywhen the supply of gas under pressure is stopped, and the con- 7 denser consequently isout of action. Wheneven and ,solong as the condenser is 111 ac drawn upward therethrough by the force of the condenser coil.

the incoming gas jet to mingle therewith, the resultant I product discharging from the combining tube into. the riser .2 ,wthrough .whichit is conducted to the topstretch of In ordento prevent the ammonia: liquid,

.avhich when the condenser ,is out ofaction passes overfrom the-compartment E. into the compartment; E from overflowing into the stand pipe F and. thus escaping from chamber .E, the said stand pipe F is of such 1 height that its top, as seen-in. Fig. 1, stands some distance/above thelevel L.lJ oft-he tivelyi trapping the liquid. For this purliquiddn the-:mixing chamber, thusseffecpose the stand pipe extends up into a domelike extension; E of the top of compartment E there being an annular space between the upper P01431011 of the stand pipe and its surrounding dome through which the gas which jissues-from the top of the stand. pipe can pass downiinto the body of the compartment below and thence to the ejector in the liquid compartment E.

.Thus the stand plpe and the compartment E constitute in efi ect a continuous conduit .for serving gasa to a nozzle in the mlxing chamber below the level of the body of liq uidcontained therein, which is formed as, or with,a reversed AU trap the top of the return tbendpfwhich is above the level oI" said body of liquid, thus preventing possibility of back ,flow of that liquid'through the conduit, when 60- the supply ofgasis cut-oil and the condenser is out of action.

Associated with the mixing. chamber is a .-drain cock R shown more clearly-inFig. :2.

,Itisa component part of the fittingand its hollow.barrel or body and stem f are contained in a case Pawhich' forms an integral part of the mixing chamber casting. The casing opens into the chamber E just under thatpart of the diaphragm O in which the gas injecting nozzle is located as indicated in'Fig. 1, which shows at R the inner open end of the tubular'body of the cock at that point. The cock is held in its casing by a suitable stufiing box, through which travels the stem of the cock, having on its outer end an operating. handle R. In the wallsof the tubular body of the cock are two :diametrically opposite ports 1", 1*, which communicate with one another through the hollow interior of. the same, and aredesigned to. operate in connection with two corresponding ports p,p, =in the walls of the casing Pthe port 10 opening into the bottom of the liquid compartment E of themixing chamber andxtheport 3) leading to the outside where. it communicates with a: pipe p through which the drainageis carried off to the liquid header Nor other suitable receiver. .The open inner end of the tubular body of the cock, opens into the lower part of the compartment. E as shown in Fig. 1, at which point thebottom ofthe compartment is depressed somewhat like. a: basin to serve as a catch-all for whatever liquid there may .be.;in= that compartment, this liquid 1", go :into the-drain pipe 19 In the modification shown in. Fig. 8, the stand pipe. F and dome like extension E of the .mixer shown in Fig. l..aro dispensed with; the opening in the floor of the compartment E through which the gas from the lower stretch of the pre-cooler' Bis supplied to the stand pipe is closed; and in lieu .of this the gas is conducted directly through an extension of the lower stretchof the precooler B tothe mixing chamber, this extGIlSlOILOf -the pre-cooler as ].l1CllCatQCl.flt B, rising abovev the ,mlxing chamber in theform of a reversed ,U trap, the return, or down, leg

of which enters. the top of the compartment E and. forms in ellectan upward continuation of thesame. Otherwise the arrangement, is the, Same as ,in' Fig. 1. Like, letters of reference indicate corresponding parts in i the two jfigures.

the mixing chamber E, is divided by a .dia-

phragm Ointo two compartments E and ,as n F 1g. l and for. the same purpose, with a corresponding nozzle 0 1n the. bottom of the compartment E for the :dis-

charge of the gas from compartment E into flowing thence into and through the hollow :body ofthe cock, and out through theports the liquid contained in compartment E. In the compartment E is erected a baflie, or partition 10, which extends vertically from the bottom of the compartment to near the top thereof, leaving between the said partition and the adjoining side wall of the compartment, a passage corresponding to the stand pipe F in Fig. 1 for the gas which is supplied from the lowest stretch of the pre-cooler B through connections which will be presently described. The entering gas passes up one side of the partition over the top and down the other side of the same just as it would in the stand pipe F arrangement in Fig. 1. k

The top of the partition w stands above the level, LL, of the liquid in the mixing chamber to prevent back flow into the gas inlet passage F of the'liquid which may enter compartment E when the condenser is not in operation, and thus the partition 10 in conjunction with the compartment E provides a'gas conduit furnished with a reversed U trap, the top of the return bend of which is above the level of the body of liquid in the mixing chamber.

In the present instance, for the purpose of separating the gas from entrained liquid before passing it to the mixing chamber, the bottom stretch for the pre-cooler is con- ,nected at (Z, to a separating chamber D having a bottom outlet cl connected by a U trap drainwith the liquid header N for the disposal of the entrained liquid which may be separated out from the gas passing into and through said chamber; a top outlet for the escape of the gas thus freed from 'entrained liquid connected by a pipe, as shown, to the gas inlet in the bottom of the mixing chamber above; and a baffle (Z which directs downward the entering mixture of gas and entrained liquid, the entrained liquid dropping down to outlet cl, and the gas thus freed from liquid passing around the lower edge of the battle and thence upward to the gas outlet (Z This separating chamber feature, however, is not here claimed, as it forms the subject of another application for Letters Patent in my name filed of even date herewith and bearing Serial No. 171,924. A suitable drainage arrangement similar to that employed in connection with the mixing chamber in Fig. lmav be provided for this modification as will be understood without further explanation.

In the modification shown in Fig. '5, I have omitted the condenser and" all pipe connections between it and themixing cham ber, those connections being the same as in the preceding illustrations. In this figure the mixing chamber E is represented as in one unitary casting with a separating chamber D such as shown in the last preceding figure.

nected, as in the preceding modifications, to

the liquid containing portion of the condenser coil, the liquid entering and filling the mixing chamber up to the level L-L which is coincident with the level of the liquid in the main liquid outlet in the condenser coil. The outlet 6 in the top of the mixing chamber is connected by a riser, such as riser y in the preceding figures, with the top stretch of the condenser coil; and at e is a drain valve controlling an outlet from the bottom of the mixing chamber into the separating chamber D below. The gas conduit and reversed U trap therein are formed by the stand pipe F set in the floorof the chamber and receiving the gas from the separating chamber D, and of such height that its open upper end extends ab'ove the level L of the liquid in the mixing chamber, and the concentric jacket Gis'urrounding thestand pipe and closed at thetop so as to inclose not only the sides but the up ameter than the latter, leaving between them an annular space for the downward passage of the gaswlnch passes overfthe top per end of the stand pipe and of greater diof the stand pipe. Apertures g' are formed in the jacket at or near its lower end for the escape of the gas into the narrow an-' nular space between the jacket and an upright deflector tube C secured in place by a spacing ring 0 interposed between the jacket and the deflector at a point below the openings 9, and united to the two by a soldered joint which closes the lower end of tie deflector against the passage of gas. The upper end of the deflector terminates below the level LL of the liquid in the mixing chamber. Thus the constricted annular space between the jacket and the deflector is in eflect an annular nozzle through which the gas under pressure issu ing from the openings 9 is forcibly directed upward as an annular jet into the body of liquid in the mixing chamber and toward the outlets in the top of the mixing chamber. In order to still further insure the proper upward passage of the gas through the mixing chamber, I interpose between the deflector C and the inlet 6 a cylindrical baflie C which is secured by a tight joint to the dome shaped top of the mixing chamber and extends down as a curtain between the deflector and the walls of the mixing chamber. Under the arrangement described it is apparent without further explanation that the stand pipe and the jacket surrounding the same constitute a gas conduit formed as a trap the top of whose return bend is above the level of the liquid in the mixing chamber, thus preventing back flowof the liquid in the mixing chamber into and down through the stand pipe when the condenser is not in action.

The two forms of mixing chamber shown in Figs. 4 and 5, are'also illustr'atedinmy hereinbefore referred to application Serial No. 171,924.

Having described my improvement and the best Way now known to me of carrying the same into practical effect I state in conclusion that I do not limit myclaim to the structural details'herein before shown and set forth in illustration of my invention, since manifestly the same can be variously modified Without departure from the spirit of the invention; but What I claim herein as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent is as follows:

1. In a condenser of the'fiooded type for ice making and refrigerating machinery,the combination With the condenser body, the mixing chamber and connections between the liquid containing portion'of 'th'e'condenser and the mixing chamber 'formaintaining in the latter a body of liquid at a predetermined levelfof a gas injecting nozzle in said mixingchamber having its discharge orifice'below the level of the liquid therein, and a conduit through which gas under pressure is supplied to said nozzle, formed as a reversed'U trap the top ofthe return bend of which stands above the level of the liquid in said mixing chamber, substantially as and for the purposes hereinbefore set forth.

2. Inthe condenser of the flooded type, the combination With the condenser body'of a mixing chamber divided into two com- Copies '01 um patent 'ma be obtained for partments E, E compartment E -having anoutlet connected to the 'upper portion of the condenser, and an inlet connected to the 'lower'and liquid containing portion of the condenser for maintaining in the mixing chamber "a body of liquid at a predetermined level; "a gas injecting nozzle in compartment E communicating through a port in the floor of the'samewitlr compartment E the'discharge orifice of'the'nozzlc partment E, and a combining tubefset n the outlet at the top of'the same.

4. In combination With the elements of the combination specified in claim 2, a drain cock located in the side of the mixing chamher and provided "with drain ports comm'unicating With both of' the two compartments E, E

In testimony whereof I hereto affix my signature.

THOMAS 'SHIPLEY.

fivecents each, byeddressing the Commissioner of Patents, Washington, D. C. 

